Mathematics Capstone Course Right Triangle ApplicationsRight Triangle Applications I. UNIT OVERVIEW...
Transcript of Mathematics Capstone Course Right Triangle ApplicationsRight Triangle Applications I. UNIT OVERVIEW...
Mathematics Capstone Course
Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project in collaboration with
Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Right Triangle Applications
I. UNIT OVERVIEW & PURPOSE: The unit will be covering properties of right triangles, Pythagorean Theorem, Converse of Pythagorean Theorem, special right triangles, and Trigonometry of right triangles. Pythagorean Theorem is covered in Standards for Algebra 1, Algebra 2, and Geometry. Pythagorean Theorem and Trigonometry is also covered in College Algebra, Pre-calculus, and Calculus. The lesson also can encompass area of triangles as well.
II. UNIT AUTHOR: Victor Maciel William Byrd High School Roanoke County
III. COURSE: Mathematical Modeling: Capstone Course (the course title might change)
IV. CONTENT STRAND: Problem Solving, Decision Making, and Integration
V. OBJECTIVES:
Students should be able to recognize a right triangle using the Pythagorean Theorem
Students should be able to calculate the lengths of sides of a special right triangle given one side
Students should be able to find the angles or sides of a right triangle given an angle and side or given two sides
VI. MATHEMATICS PERFORMANCE EXPECTATION(s):
MPE.5 The student will solve real-world problems involving right triangles by using the Pythagorean Theorem and its converse, properties of special right triangles, and right triangle trigonometry.
VII. CONTENT: The content that will be discussed in this unit deals with using Pythagorean Theorem to solve real world problems covering distances on a map. Using Trigonometry to find angles of elevation, angles of depression, and distances to solve real world problems. Finally I will discuss a recent event (Tornado in Joplin, MO) where students will have to: plan to find the distance to Joplin, Mo from where they live, determine the path of the tornado, how many square feet the tornado affected, the shape of the tornado, and
2 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
finally the height of the Tornado.
VIII. REFERENCE/RESOURCE MATERIALS: Each student will need a TI -83 or above calculator. Ruler. Protractor. Map of the United States. Worksheets dealing with real world applications. A computer that has internet access for finding data on the Tornado that hit Joplin.
IX. PRIMARY ASSESSMENT STRATEGIES: The assessments will be worksheets that will measure the students understanding of the material. There will also be assessments for real world problems at the end of each class.
X. EVALUATION CRITERIA: For the first two days of the class there will be a seven question worksheets where each question is worth ten points. The final thirty points will be determined by the application question. The final day’s lesson will be a project that each student will turn in. The final lesson project will be worth a total of 100 points. All three days of assessments will total 300 points.
XI. INSTRUCTIONAL TIME: The instructional time required for this unit will be three 90-minute class periods.
3 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Lesson 1 Pythagorean Theorem and Its Converse
Strand Geometry Mathematical Objective(s) Identifying right triangles, Pythagorean theorem. In this lesson students will use the
Pythagorean theorem to find distance between two points on a map. Students will also use the
converse of the Pythagorean theorem to determine if points on a map form a right triangle.
Students will develop a travel plan following a right triangle path. In the travel plan students will
use their knowledge of right triangles to determine the distance traveled. Students will locate
three points on a map that form a right triangle. Students will also have to plan a budget
according to travel distance, gas prices, hotel rooms, food and drink, and mpg depending on the
car they wish to drive.
Mathematics Performance Expectation(s) 1) The student will solve practical problems involving rational numbers (including numbers
in scientific notation), percents, ratios, and proportions.
2) The student will solve real-world problems involving right triangles by using the Pythagorean Theorem and its converse, properties of special right triangles, and right triangle trigonometry.
3) The student, given a point other than the origin on the terminal side of an angle, will use the definitions of the six trigonometric functions to find the sine, cosine, tangent, cotangent, secant, and cosecant of the angle in standard position. Trigonometric functions defined on the unit circle will be related to trigonometric functions defined in right triangles.
Related SOL
G.7 The student will solve practical problems involving right triangles by using the Pythagorean Theorem, properties of special right triangles, and right triangle trigonometry. Solutions will be expressed in radical form or as decimal approximations.
NCTM Standards
Use trigonometric relationships to determine lengths and angle measures.
Use geometric ideas to solve problems in, and gain insights into, other disciplines and other areas of interest such as art and architecture
4 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Additional Objectives for Student Learning (include if relevant; may not be math-related): The student will need to know how to read and use a map. Materials/Resources
Classroom set of graphing calculators
Classroom set of tangible road atlas map. Map can be found:
http://images.nationmaster.com/images/motw/national_atlas_1970/ca000012.jpg
Ruler
Classroom set of computers
Assumption of Prior Knowledge
The typical student would have already taken Algebra 1 class.
Student should know how to use the Pythagorean Theorem and its Converse.
To succeed in this lesson students should know how to use a ruler.
Students should know how to solve for a variable that involves using squares and square
roots.
The most common misconception in this problem would be converting different units such
as inches to miles.
The relevant real life context in this problem is budgeting for travel.
Introduction: Setting Up the Mathematical Task Understanding Student Comprehension: Since not all students have the same level of
understanding of certain concepts there will be a 30-minute review of not only the Pythagorean
theorem, but also knowing how to use a map and converting inches to miles.
Students will work in groups of two.
Each student will get a worksheet filled with seven questions and one real world problem.
Questions on the worksheet will consist of problems that correspond to finding distance-
using points/cities on the map, proving that points/cities either make a right triangle or do
not, and finally finding three points/cities on their own that make up a right triangle and
proving this using the converse of the Pythagorean theorem.
This warm-up activity should not last longer than 30-minutes
Real World Problem:
Next I will ask all students if they were planning a road trip, to think of all the factors that
would have to create a budget for a road trip.
1. Distance
2. Gas Prices
3. MPG for the car they prefer to take
5 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
4. Hotel cost using a travel website
5. Food and Beverage
6. Tourism
Once the list has been generated students will use the last question in the warm-up as
their trip.
Students will develop a budget using the help of the Internet. Time should not take longer
than 45-minutes.
Last 15-minutes of class students will present their budget to the class.
Student/Teacher Actions:
To explore and develop this lesson the following are important points of discussions:
Using the map given to each student one inch corresponded to 100 miles
Since the trip will consist of interstate travel the price of gas will be the national average
which was found by google.com to be 3.57
Students may choose which car they wish to travel in and have to use the internet to find
the average miles per gallon highway
Students may choose which hotel they would wish to stay in but must use the Internet and
a travel website.
Students need to know how to spend their money according to dining. They need to
know how much money they need to eat on.
Tourism is a category in which students must plan sites to visit while on their trip. They
can find points of interest by visiting the city’s website.
Monitoring Student Responses
Students make their mathematical thinking and understanding public by responding to the
questions mentioned in their worksheet in their small groups as well as during the class
presentation at the end of class. Since there is more than one correct answer for the group
project (Example: Not all students will be using the same cities as their three points) allow
students to prove their assumption that these cities form a right angle using the converse
Pythagorean theorem. Students will also discuss their budgets as well.
Students may have a problem converting inches to miles. Make sure all students know how
to convert from inches to miles.
Make sure students know how to do the warm-up worksheet before they attempt the
budget project.
For students who tend to finish more quickly see how much their budget changes by using
different cars. (Example: Instead of traveling in an SUV maybe the students use a hybrid
vehicle.)
6 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Assessment 1. The first assessment will be the warm-up worksheet that consist of seven questions
o Questions
Find the distance from Roanoke, VA to Washington, D.C. using a right
triangle.
Find the distance from Richmond, VA to Austin, TX using a right triangle.
Find the distance from New York, NY to Los Angeles, CA using a right triangle.
Determine if the three cities Springfield, MO, Bowling Green, KY and
Huntsville, AL using the converse Pythagorean theorem.
Determine if the three cities Roanoke, VA, Richmond, VA and Washington,
D.C. using the converse Pythagorean theorem.
Determine if the three cities Kansas City, MO, Sacramento, CA and Seattle,
WA using the converse Pythagorean theorem.
On your own find three cities that are in three different states that form a
right triangle.
Each question in assessment one is worth ten points each.
2. The second assessment will be the Travel Budget.
Questions
o Using the cities that the students found formed a right triangle on their
own will develop a travel budget for the following trip.
o The budget will consist of gas price, mpg, hotel, travel distance, tourism,
and food. Feel free to add or take away from the budget.
The budget will be worth 30 points and students will have to write these down.
Extensions and Connections (for all students)
To extend material for students who are ready to move forward introduce a different
concept with right triangles. Let students try to find 30-60-90 right triangles and 45-45-90
right triangles that have vertices at cities.
Strategies for Differentiation The differentiation strategies might include but are not limited to the following list created specifically
for ESL students. Feel free to adopt these to your lesson:
Make instruction more concrete, visual, collaborative, and hands-on
Assign roles to students in collaborative activities. Discover the strengths of EOL students and assign appropriate roles.
Be aware that there might be some differences in communicating the procedural knowledge of mathematics
7 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Focus on mathematical content rather than on linguistic form (simplify word problems without changing the math meaning)
Language and content should be presented simultaneously
Seating (near teacher or next to a buddy, native language if possible)
Write legibly and in print
Step by step instructions (orally and in writing) Ask students to repeat aloud for the rest of the class.
Give EOL student more time for questions and answers.
Let them discuss in pairs first
Enunciate clearly and slowly without speaking louder.
Simplify the language used rather than the mathematical concepts taught (use known vocabulary and simple sentence constructions).
When students speak, focus on their message rather than their grammatical skills and accuracy. Respond using the proper grammatical form rather than overtly correcting their mistakes.
Give LEP students (especially beginners) alternate ways to participate in whole-class discussions and respond to questions (think/pair/share, flashcards to raise over head, hand and/or body movements, individual chalkboards for solving computations).
Assess whether LEP students have mastered mathematical concepts rather than their English grammar and fluency.
The accommodations are adopted from the following source. http://www.doe.virginia.gov/VDOE/Instruction/ESL/LEPmathResource.pdf
8 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Lesson 2 Right Triangle Trigonometry
Strand Geometry Mathematical Objective(s) Identifying right triangles, Right Triangle Trigonometry. In this lesson students will examine real
life problems using right triangle trigonometry. Students will also use angles of depression and
angles of elevation to determine the length of corresponding sides of a triangle. Students will
also be taken outsides and determine the angle of elevation for a kite flying in the wind.
Mathematics Performance Expectation(s)
1) The student will solve practical problems involving rational numbers (including numbers in scientific notation), percents, ratios, and proportions.
2) The student will solve real-world problems involving right triangles by using the Pythagorean Theorem and its converse, properties of special right triangles, and right triangle trigonometry.
3) The student, given a point other than the origin on the terminal side of an angle, will use the definitions of the six trigonometric functions to find the sine, cosine, tangent, cotangent, secant, and cosecant of the angle in standard position. Trigonometric functions defined on the unit circle will be related to trigonometric functions defined in right triangles.
Related SOL
G.7 The student will solve practical problems involving right triangles by using the Pythagorean Theorem, properties of special right triangles, and right triangle trigonometry. Solutions will be expressed in radical form or as decimal approximations.
NCTM Standards
Use trigonometric relationships to determine lengths and angle measures.
Use geometric ideas to solve problems in, and gain insights into, other disciplines and other areas of interest such as art and architecture
Additional Objectives for Student Learning (include if relevant; may not be math-related): Students will need to know how to read measuring devices. Materials/Resources
9 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Classroom set of graphing calculators
Kite with string marked by feet; this way the hypotenuse is easier to measure.
Measuring Tape in yards and feet
Access to outside space
Assumption of Prior Knowledge
The typical student would have already taken Algebra 1 class.
Student should know how to use the Pythagorean Theorem and its Converse.
To succeed in this lesson students should know how to use measuring tape.
Students should know how to solve for a variable that involves using right triangle
trigonometry.
The most common misconception in this problem would be converting different units such
as yards to feet.
The relevant real life context in this problem is determining length, height, angle of
depression, and/or angle of depression given limited facts.
Students should know how to use the Pythagorean Theorem to find the lengths of a missing
side in a right triangle.
Students also should know the interior angle-sum for a triangle.
Introduction: Setting Up the Mathematical Task Understanding Student Comprehension: Since not all students have the same level of
understanding of certain concepts there will be a 30-minute review of solving for missing lengths
on the right triangle, angle of elevation, and angles of depression. There will also be a short
discussion on how many feet are in a yard.
Students will work in groups of two. Students will partner where high-level students are
with low-level students. Partnering in this way should limit the amount of review time.
Each student will get a worksheet filled with six questions; all questions will be real life
examples.
Questions on the worksheet will consist of problems that correspond to finding lengths of
a right triangle, angle of depression and angle of elevation. All questions will correspond
to real life examples.
This warm-up activity should not last longer than 30-minutes
Hands on Activity:
Hands on Activity will begin once students are finished with warm-up/worksheet activity.
Students should be taken outside still being with their partners. Students at no point
should leave their partners.
Once outside to a wide-open space teacher should start to fly the kite.
10 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Once the kite is flying well students should line up behind the teacher side by side with
their partner.
The first group should have the measuring tape and one student should walk out under
the kite to determine the distance from the teacher to the kite and the other student should
stay with the teacher measuring the length of the string while holding the measuring tape.
Students will record this data and then try to find the height of the kite, angle of
elevation, and the third angle in the right triangle.
Students will share their findings at the end of class.
Student/Teacher Actions:
To explore and develop this lesson the following are important points of discussions:
How many feet are in a yard? How many yards make up a football field? How many feet
make up a football field?
What are good conditions for flying a kite?
Students need to know all trigonometric ratios. Students may ask how the trigonometric
ratios came about.
Students need to know that dividing by a trigonometric function is not the same as taking
the inverse.
Make sure calculator is in degree mode. Explain why there is a degree mode and radian
mode for trigonometric ratios.
Monitoring Student Responses
Students make their mathematical thinking and understanding public by responding to the
questions mentioned in their worksheet in their small groups as well as during the class
presentation at the end of class. Since there is more than one correct answer for the group
project (Example: Not all students will have the same base and hypotenuse for their right
triangle because wind will not stay constant) this allows a student to prove their assumption
that the kite forms a right angle using the converse Pythagorean theorem.
Students may have a problem converting yards to feet. Make sure all students know how to
convert from yards to feet.
Make sure students know how to do the warm-up worksheet before they attempt the kite
activity.
For students who tend to finish more quickly tell them extend the lengths of their right
triangle so that it is bigger but similar. Ask the student to find the angles using
trigonometric ratios. Then ask him why are the lengths the same and to determine what
this means about how trigonometric ratios are found.
11 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Assessment 1.) The first assessment will be the warm-up worksheet that consist of six questions
o Questions
Victor is standing 335.5 ft from the Empire State building. The angle of
elevation from Victor’s feet is 77 degrees. Find the actual height of the
Empire State building.
You are about to climb the tallest mountain in the world, Mount Everest. You
set up base camp 50,000 thousand feet from the peak. The angle of
depression from the peak to camp is 30 degrees. Find the actual height of
Mount Everest.
You are standing at the top of the world’s tallest tower the Burj Khalifa in
Dubai, United Arab Emirates. You are looking at your friend at an angle of
depression of 45 degrees. If the top of the tower is 2717 ft high, how far is
your friend?
You are standing at the free throw line. If the distance from the free throw
line to the backboard is 15 ft and the height from the ground to the basket is
10 ft find the angle of elevation.
You are in a hot air balloon and are 7,000 ft in the air. You can see your
house using an angle of depression of 37 degrees. What is the lines of sight
distance from you and your house?
You are standing in a hotel room in Paris, France. You can see the Eiffel tower
from you room. The Eiffel tower is 750 feet away. The angle of elevation
from your room to the top of the Eiffel tower is 46 degrees and the angle of
depression from your room to the bottom of the Eiffel tower is 20.9 degrees.
Find how high you room is off the ground and find the total height of the
Eiffel tower.
Each question in assessment one is worth ten points each.
2.) The second assessment will be the Kite activity.
Question
o Using the kite the students will have to use the length of the string and
the distance from the teacher to directly underneath the kite (distance)
to find height, angle of elevation, and the opposite angle of the base.
o The student must confirm these by using the converse Pythagorean
theorem as well.
The activity will be worth 40 points and students will have to write these down to present. Five
percent of the grade for this activity should be on the clarity of the presentation.
12 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Extensions and Connections (for all students)
To extend material for students who are ready to move forward introduce the concept of
how trigonometric identities are solved by letting them create a similar triangle to their kite
triangle and ask the students to find the angles using trigonometric ratios. Let them
determine why trigonometric ratios are the values they are.
Example: A 3-4-5 right triangle could be 9-12-15 and they will determine that the angles are
the same. This will help them realize that trigonometric ratios are actual ratios of the
degree. No matter how long the sides how if the ratios are the same then they will have the
same degree.
Strategies for Differentiation The differentiation strategies might include but are not limited to the following list created specifically
for ESL students. Feel free to adopt these to your lesson:
Make instruction more concrete, visual, collaborative, and hands-on
Assign roles to students in collaborative activities. Discover the strengths of EOL students and assign appropriate roles.
Be aware that there might be some differences in communicating the procedural knowledge of mathematics
Focus on mathematical content rather than on linguistic form (simplify word problems without changing the math meaning)
Language and content should be presented simultaneously
Seating (near teacher or next to a buddy, native language if possible)
Write legibly and in print
Step by step instructions (orally and in writing) Ask students to repeat aloud for the rest of the class.
Give EOL student more time for questions and answers.
Let them discuss in pairs first
Enunciate clearly and slowly without speaking louder.
Simplify the language used rather than the mathematical concepts taught (use known vocabulary and simple sentence constructions).
When students speak, focus on their message rather than their grammatical skills and accuracy. Respond using the proper grammatical form rather than overtly correcting their mistakes.
13 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Give LEP students (especially beginners) alternate ways to participate in whole-class discussions and respond to questions (think/pair/share, flashcards to raise over head, hand and/or body movements, individual chalkboards for solving computations).
Assess whether LEP students have mastered mathematical concepts rather than their English grammar and fluency.
The accommodations are adopted from the following source. http://www.doe.virginia.gov/VDOE/Instruction/ESL/LEPmathResource.pdf
14 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Lesson 3 Right Triangle Trigonometry, Pythagorean Theorem and it Converse
Strand Geometry Mathematical Objective(s) Identifying right triangles, Right Triangle Trigonometry. Pythagorean theorem and it converse.
In this lesson students will examine real life problems using right triangle trigonometry to
determine the size of a F-5 tornado. Students will also use the converse of the Pythagorean
theorem to determine if points on a map form a right triangle. Students will develop a travel
plan following a right triangle path. In the travel plan students will use their knowledge of right
triangles to determine the distance traveled. Students will form the right triangle where two of
the vertices will be Joplin, MO and Tuscaloosa, AL. Students will also have to plan a budget
according to travel distance, gas prices, hotel rooms, food and drink, and mpg depending on the
car they wish to drive.
Mathematics Performance Expectation(s)
3.) The student will solve practical problems involving rational numbers (including numbers in scientific notation), percents, ratios, and proportions.
4.) The student will solve real-world problems involving right triangles by using the Pythagorean Theorem and its converse, properties of special right triangles, and right triangle trigonometry.
5.) The student, given a point other than the origin on the terminal side of an angle, will use the definitions of the six trigonometric functions to find the sine, cosine, tangent, cotangent, secant, and cosecant of the angle in standard position. Trigonometric functions defined on the unit circle will be related to trigonometric functions defined in right triangles.
Related SOL
G.7 The student will solve practical problems involving right triangles by using the Pythagorean Theorem, properties of special right triangles, and right triangle trigonometry. Solutions will be expressed in radical form or as decimal approximations.
15 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
NCTM Standards
Use trigonometric relationships to determine lengths and angle measures.
Use geometric ideas to solve problems in, and gain insights into, other disciplines and other areas of interest such as art and architecture
Additional Objectives for Student Learning (include if relevant; may not be math-related): Students will need to know how to read measuring devices. Students will also need to know how to read and use a map. Materials/Resources
Classroom set of graphing calculators
Classroom set of tangible road atlas map. Map can be found:
http://images.nationmaster.com/images/motw/national_atlas_1970/ca000012.jpg
Classroom set of computers
Assumption of Prior Knowledge
The typical student would have already taken Algebra 1 class.
Student should know how to use the Pythagorean Theorem and its Converse.
To succeed in this lesson students should know how to use measuring tape.
Students should know how to solve for a variable that involves using right triangle
trigonometry.
The most common misconception in this problem would be converting different units such
as yards to feet and inches to miles.
The relevant real life context in this problem is determining length, height, angle of
depression, and/or angle of depression given limited facts.
Students should know how to use the Pythagorean Theorem to find the lengths of a missing
side in a right triangle.
The relevant real life context in this problem is budgeting for travel.
Students should know the interior angle-sum for a triangle.
Introduction: Setting Up the Mathematical Task Understanding Student Comprehension: Before lesson 3 should be conducted students should
have completed both lesson 1 and lesson 2 of this unit plan. It is possible to use the lesson
without completing the former lessons but the time frames used for the lesson may be longer.
The first part of the exercise, students will investigate the natural disaster that affected Joplin,
MO. Students will investigate this by using the internet.
Hands on Activity:
16 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Students will work in groups of two. Students will partner where high-level students are
with low-level students. Partnering in this way should limit the amount of time needed
for each section.
Each student will investigate the events that transpired and will have to write down five
interesting facts.
Students will also have to determine the shape of the tornado that hit Joplin. Students will
determine the height and width of the tornado and then determine using right triangle
trigonometry the all angles formed by the tornado and the hypotenuse of the triangle.
This hands-on activity should not last longer than 30-minutes
Real World Problem:
Real world problem will begin immediately as the hands-on activity is conducted.
Students will then be told that they are part of a clean-up crew cleaning up the disaster
that has affected Joplin, MO and Tuscaloosa, AL. Students may only travel in a right
triangle. Using the same map from lesson 1, students will have to determine the starting
city that also makes up a right triangle.
Students need to plan for everything on the clean-up trip, these are factors students need
to think about when creating a budget for the trip.
1. Distance
2. Gas Prices
3. MPG for the car they prefer to take
4. Hotel cost using a travel website
5. Food and Beverage
6. Tourism
Students will develop a budget using the help of the Internet. Time should not take longer
than 30-minutes.
The last 30-minutes of class students will be allowed to present their scale drawing of the
tornado in Joplin along with a building to show the size of the actual tornado. Then the
five facts will be presented along with the budget plan. Should take no longer than 5
minutes each.
Student/Teacher Actions:
To explore and develop this lesson the following are important points of discussions:
How many feet are in a yard? How many yards make up a football field? How many feet
make up a football field?
Using the map given to each student one inch corresponded to 100 miles
Since the trip will consist of interstate travel the price of gas will be the national average
which was found by google.com to be 3.57
Students may choose which car they wish to travel in and have to use the internet to find
the average miles per gallon highway
17 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Students may choose which hotel they would wish to stay in but must use the Internet and
a travel website.
Students need to know how to spend their money according to dining. They need to
know how much money they need to eat on.
Tourism is a category in which students must plan sites to visit while on their trip. They
can find points of interest by visiting the city’s website.
Students need to know all trigonometric ratios. Students may ask how the trigonometric
ratios came about.
Students need to know that dividing by a trigonometric function is not the same as taking
the inverse.
Make sure calculator is in degree mode. Explain why there is a degree mode and radian
mode for trigonometric ratios.
The impacts of natural disasters such as tornados, tsunamis, and earthquakes.
Monitoring Student Responses
Students make their mathematical thinking and understanding public by responding to the
questions mentioned in their project in their small groups as well as during the class
presentation at the end of class. Since there is more than one correct answer for the group
project (Example: Not all students will have the same base and hypotenuse for their right
triangle on the travel trip because of differing cities) this allows a student to prove their
assumption that the sides form a right angle using the converse Pythagorean theorem.
Students may have a problem converting yards to feet. Make sure all students know how to
convert from yards to feet.
Make sure students have good foundation of Pythagorean theorem and its converse as well
as right triangle trigonometry.
For students who tend to finish more quickly tell them to find five interesting facts about
the disaster in Tuscaloosa, AL and present info also in class. Are there any similarities
between the two natural disasters?
Assessment The first assessment will be the hands-on activity that consists of drawing a scale model and
five interesting facts.
o Directions:
Students will find information that will help them draw a scale drawing of the
tornado that hit Joplin. To do this they need to know the height, width,
and/or angles of the tornado. Make sure students when using the width
know to divide by two to form the right triangle. The drawing also needs to
18 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
include a building that is drawn to scale with the tornado so that the class
can see the actual size of the tornado.
Students will also need to find five interesting facts about the disaster in
Joplin.
The hands-on activity is worth 45 percent of the day’s assessment. When grading this
assessment determine if the data collected matches the scale drawing. If the student
determined the height to be 20000 ft and the base to be 16000 all the angles should
correspond.
The second assessment will be the travel activity.
Question
o Using the cities that the students found formed a right triangle on their
own will develop a travel budget for the following trip.
o The budget will consist of gas price, mpg, hotel, travel distance, tourism,
and food. Feel free to add or take away from the budget.
The budget will be worth 50 percent and students will have to write these down to present.
Presentation
The students will make a presentation using the information found with both
activities. Students will present no longer than 5 minutes.
The presentation should be worth 5 percent of the day’s assessment.
Extensions and Connections (for all students)
To extend material for students who are ready to move forward introduce the concept of
how trigonometric identities are solved by letting them create a similar triangle to their kite
triangle and ask the students to find the angles using trigonometric ratios. Let them
determine why trigonometric ratios are the values they are.
To extend material for students who are ready to move forward introduce a different
concept with right triangles. Let students try to find 30-60-90 right triangles and 45-45-90
right triangles that have vertices at cities.
Strategies for Differentiation The differentiation strategies might include but are not limited to the following list created specifically
for ESL students. Feel free to adopt these to your lesson:
Make instruction more concrete, visual, collaborative, and hands-on
Assign roles to students in collaborative activities. Discover the strengths of EOL students and assign appropriate roles.
Be aware that there might be some differences in communicating the procedural knowledge of mathematics
19 Developed by Dr. Agida Manizade & Dr. Laura Jacobsen, Radford University MSP project
in collaboration with Mr. Michael Bolling, Virginia Department of Education
Focus on mathematical content rather than on linguistic form (simplify word problems without changing the math meaning)
Language and content should be presented simultaneously
Seating (near teacher or next to a buddy, native language if possible)
Write legibly and in print
Step by step instructions (orally and in writing) Ask students to repeat aloud for the rest of the class.
Give EOL student more time for questions and answers.
Let them discuss in pairs first
Enunciate clearly and slowly without speaking louder.
Simplify the language used rather than the mathematical concepts taught (use known vocabulary and simple sentence constructions).
When students speak, focus on their message rather than their grammatical skills and accuracy. Respond using the proper grammatical form rather than overtly correcting their mistakes.
Give LEP students (especially beginners) alternate ways to participate in whole-class discussions and respond to questions (think/pair/share, flashcards to raise over head, hand and/or body movements, individual chalkboards for solving computations).
Assess whether LEP students have mastered mathematical concepts rather than their English grammar and fluency.
The accommodations are adopted from the following source. http://www.doe.virginia.gov/VDOE/Instruction/ESL/LEPmathResource.pdf